Challenges
It was designed to improve access to healthcare for underprivileged populations suffering from chronic health issues. Using videoconferencing technologies, the ECHO Project trains general practitioners, rural doctors, primary care physicians, and family doctors in the diagnosis and treatment of complex diseases. It is an ideal tool to address disparities in healthcare systems. The foundation of this program\\\'s success can be summarized in its effectiveness in decentralizing the scientific knowledge available at the university hospital to healthcare teams scattered throughout the community. This creates and strengthens their capacity to assist more patients and treat more conditions, with consequent benefits for the populations of these areas, especially the poorest and/or most isolated from urban centers.
Towards a Solution
The aim is to unite the efforts of all organizations interested in implementing actions to facilitate access to quality healthcare services for all citizens, particularly for those living in critical geographic areas where problems arise due to the shortage of medical specialists. This situation is most severe among the most vulnerable populations, those living in remote areas far from urban centers and often in contexts of poverty. Specifically, this project proposes a methodology to create communities of practice that enable medical consultations and mutual learning among the involved healthcare teams. Beyond strictly healthcare-related aspects, the ECHO model allows for knowledge management within the community of practice formed for this purpose, fostering multidirectional educational processes. To launch the project, contact was made with key healthcare stakeholders deeply committed to this initiative, living in locations suitable for its development. There are no exclusionary criteria to set local teams. Therefore, the diversity of healthcare situations across the country was considered, starting with the most underprivileged areas on the outskirts of Montevideo, rural and urban areas in the interior, and even the prison population. Gradually, local healthcare teams became better equipped to adequately address patients with specific conditions within their communities. Additionally, specialists were able to share their expertise with colleagues who were not fully versed in all aspects of disease treatment, thereby multiplying the healthcare system\\\'s capacity to respond to real-world challenges. The implementation of \\\"ECHO clinics\\\" includes the legal components required by the country\\\'s current laws, as well as ethical recommendations regarding patient rights, based on consultations with legal medicine and bioethics specialists from the Faculty of Medicine. This means that every activity adhered to the corresponding legal protocols for patient consultations and the necessary informed consent forms, ensuring a framework of legal security and ethical responsibility toward citizens. In 2015, ECHO Uruguay was selected to be the first superhub in Latin America. In this role, it has trained hundreds of healthcare team members, IT technicians, clinical records managers, and project leaders from over 50 healthcare organizations in Brazil, Argentina, El Salvador, Ecuador, Mexico, Peru, Colombia, Guatemala, Panama, Honduras, and other countries. The training is free and conducted in Spanish and Portuguese. By 2019, six organizations were trained in person, and from 2020 onward, training shifted to a virtual format. At the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic in March 2020, ECHO Udelar had a community of practice consisting of healthcare professionals across all departments of the country, a team of specialists, and the necessary technological infrastructure to support the needs of healthcare teams addressing the pandemic. In this context, throughout 2020 and 2021, virtual activities were conducted for professionals in Uruguay and Latin America with the support of the Inter-American Development Bank and the ECHO Institute at the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque, USA. In 2021, with the support of the Inter-American Development Bank, efforts began to expand and strengthen the ECHO project in El Salvador, Ecuador, and Honduras. The goal was to collaborate with healthcare teams to address the complications left by COVID-19 and to explore ways to navigate the recovery of healthcare services and life in the \\\"new normal.\\\" To ensure the achievement of these results, the following are required: <ul> <li>Political will, connectivity, interaction among diverse disciplines, a legal framework, and a robust healthcare system.</li> <li>Central and local medical teams, as well as specialists, committed to building a community of exchange to improve the quality of life for their patients and society as a whole.</li> <li>Quality and widespread internet connectivity for the development of telemedicine.</li> <li>Support from national health authorities, academic institutions, and healthcare providers across the country.</li> </ul>